The dinner of Ronaldo and Messi

During the UEFA Champions League draw in Monaco, Ronaldo admitted that he and his arch-rival Lionel Messi “have a good relationship” but the pair “have not had dinner together yet.” Team Portugal’s captain finished with expressing hope of doing so in the future.

In response to Ronaldo’s comments, during Euro 2020 qualifying, the city of Vilnius decided to act as a mediator between the two living football legends and offer them dinner at one of the city’s top restaurants.

Ten of the top-rated restaurants jumped on board by inviting the distinguished guests to try the best their chefs have to offer.

For this purpose, the installation out of food, tableware and restaurant equipment depicting Ronaldo and Messi was created. It took a staggering 27 hours putting together a piece of how Ronaldo and Messi having dinner together might look.

In total, the artwork is eight meters long and three meters wide, made of 658 objects that include oysters, shrimps, grapes and various desserts and drinks. Every object was picked individually from 17 different stores around Vilnius city.

A photographed and printed version of the art piece was gifted by the mayor of Vilnius and Jolita Vaitkute.

The project was initiated by Go Vilnius.

Self portrait

Hundreds of furniture and accessories, an area of 100 square meters, this is another perspective installation that hides nothing but the self-portrait of Jolita Vaitkute. Using interior details from the various salons in the Domus Gallery helps to reveal the character of the artist. The process took sixty hours, during which was walked about 84 kilometers.

Two-point composition

The focus is on spatial change and innovation. The main goal of this installation was to provide not only aesthetic satisfaction but also to create emotion and experience.

Looking from the point of the bottom of the library stairs you can observe the figurative composition. It symbolizes the first sketch, the basic geometric shapes that are often used to think about the architecture of the smart city of the future.

The second part of the installation is a bright trail that symbolizes creative inspiration and flow of thoughts. The path was best seen from the balcony on the fifth floor of the library.

The installation for the future city of Lithuania covered almost 100 square meters and was exhibited in the National Library of Martynas Mažvydas.

The 71 square meters installation is like a bridge between history and the present. Books revive by living history, and in the way like this, makes sense of space.

Soil as a medium

In 2018, my homeland Lithuania commemorated its centennial as a Republic. Searching for a conceptual medium for my work dedicated to this occasion, I discovered soil as a means of drawing. Soil is simple and archaic, yet it can be rediscovered as a creative medium. Here I am drawing portraits of the statesmen who signed Lithuania's declaration of independence in 1918. They were used in a live installation and as portraits for the press.

The Creator

Life Land

Installation Life Land is from soil - a simple and archaic material, a symbol of life. During WW2 Japanese consul in Lithuania Chiune Sugihara gifted lives for thousands of Jews by issuing them transit visas to Japan, thus granting survivors a second life. A mix of Lithuanian and Japanese soil is a creative medium for Sugihara’s portrait - an act of gratitude for all Japanese. For survirors it was Life land - the only way to be safe.

Installation was exhibited at Broadbean gallery in Tokyo on Oct. 2018.

Martynas the accordion player

I made a portrait of the accordionist Martynas Levickis from real accordions and their parts.

An accordion has about twenty thousands parts inside, so I decided to create the portrait from them. We disassembled two old accordions into the smallest possible parts.

It was a nice way to give new life to old instruments in an art project. It took about four hours.

Client: accoAkademija

33 heart broken stories

Imagine that it's enough to have a single look at someone’s broken phone and their life story pops up in front of your eyes. What if it will be yours?

We touch the screens much more often than the bodies of our loved ones. We see the World and feel intimacy through the glass. We are so lonely with our phones, and even much more lonely and insecure without them. Broken screens are like the last moments of the lives of our beloved ones. Appreciate it – with a single glance you can make it precious.

Signato

Accordion week

Accordion installations for accordion week in Vilnius

Client: accoAkademija

Croissant Napoleon

Advertising for Narvesen with McCann Vilnius agency.

The slogan says "French to the last crumb!"

One angle food art

Sometimes when Emilija Vinzanovaite and I get tired of art installations, we make tasty and giant food art, which which is meant to be eaten! The first one is a four meter long perspective artwork (meaning you can see it only from one angle) with Einstein’s face. We worked for five hours on this one. It was made from different desserts such as cannelés, chocolate, muffins, strawberries, grapes, macaroons… And we had to control ourselves not to eat while working.

The second one is the Lithuanian painter and composer M.K. Ciurlionis. We made his portrait from chocolate desserts such as muffins, cakes, cookies, doughnuts and some berries. It’s a bit smaller than Einstein and took us a few hours. We used the same technique – you can see the face only from one angle, but nevertheless you can eat it from all sides.

The Fruit Bee

A perspective composition of fruits hanging in the air. Today, honeybees are faced with many hostile factors threatening the survival of these honey-producing insects. For example, various pests such as varroa mites, pathogens, chemicals, pesticides and the loss of their natural habitats. All of these factors have been leading to mass bee fatality and so-called "colony collapse disorder". Bees are responsible for the pollination of one third of all plants used for human consumption. The fruits that were used for this installation are just a small fraction of the diverse foods that humanity would lose if bees ceased to exist.

Untranslatable Words

“Untranslatable Words” is a project illustrating words from several languages which are impossible to translate. Initiator of the project was European Commission’s representation in Lithuania.

Gökotta (Swedish): To wake up early in the morning with the purpose of going outside to hear the first birds sing.

Sobremesa is a Spanish word that refers to the time spent after lunch or dinner socializing with the people you shared the meal with. Meals are a very important part of Spanish culture, and the Spaniards value the time spent relaxing and chatting after they finishing eating. The Catalan equivalent is sobretaula.

Litost (Czech). Milan Kundera, author of The Unbearable Lightness of Being, remarked that, “As for the meaning of this word, I have looked in vain in other languages for an equivalent, though I find it difficult to imagine how anyone can understand the human soul without it.” The closest definition is a state of agony and torment created by the sudden realization of one’s own misery.

Pålegg (Norwegian): Anything and everything you can put on a slice of bread.

Verschlimmbessern (German): To accidentally make something worse in the process of attempting to mend or improve it. Multiple applications regarding computers, cake baking and relationships.

Gattara (Italian): This untranslatable word describes a woman, often old and lonely, who devotes herself to stray cats. The Simpsons have this character too, known as the Crazy Cat Lady.

Házisárkány (Hungarian): This untranslatable word would be literally translated as “home-dragon”. The derogatory term actually designates an impatient or ill-natured spouse.

Rubbish art

A project to raise public awareness of recycling. The participants retained their garbage for several weeks, and then had their portraits created from their waste. The project was initiated by Zalias taskas (“Green dot”).

Einstein from pencils

A visual installation for a fair organised by the stationery company OfficeDay created from about a thousand pencils – a perspective portrait of Albert Einstein, chosen as an icon of creativity. The project took about 11 hours to complete.

A noteworthy Founding father

A perspective installation for a campaign by the Lithuanian Youth Council (LiJOT) encouraging young people to vote. The work portrays Jonas Basanavicius [j ɒn a s b ʌs ʌn ʌv ɪt ʃuːs], a founding father of the Lithuanian Republic in 1918, and is composed of many notes on which a number of prominent Lithuanians wrote down their thoughts as to why they vote.

1064 pieces of toast

For the opening of a new bread factory, I was asked to create an installation from bread. After a few months of brainstorming I decided to do something new – a gigantic toast installation. The idea was to render a view of the city of Vilnius. That was the easiest part. Unfortunately, I didn’t realize ahead of time how difficult this would actually be (insert many days for drying bread and counting every slice).

Our toast installation ended up being about 3.5×2.5 m and we used 1064 pieces of toast to create it. We worked in a team for about 50 hours. And it happened, we set a Lithuanian record for the largest piece of artwork made from toast.

And if that’s not enough trouble, we had a few accidents while transporting our beauty and I had to recreate it three times...